Anderson, M. and Fienberg, S. F. (2000). "Race and Ethnicity and the Controversy over the US Census." Current Sociology. Vol. 48 (3).Anderson, Margo, and Stephen E. Fienberg. 2000. "Race and Ethnicity and the Controversy over the US Census." Current Sociology 48(3):87-110....
Nevertheless, living in communities with higher socioeconomic disadvantage was associated with higher BMI net of age, race, individual SES, smoking, physical activity, stress, and social support. Community income inequality (Gini) had an independent positive association with BMI, but did not ...
The changes will be reflected in data collection, forms, surveys and the once-a-decade census questionnaires put out by the federal government, as well as in state governments and the private sector because businesses, universities and other groups usually fo...
the median cost of housing for both u.s. renters and homeowners rose last year and while the share of income renters put toward housing was unchanged overall the degree to which households were cost-burdened varied by race, the census bureau said on thursday. more th...
I have a population at 2,000 dollars [per capita annual income]. I also need energy, and I am not in a position to pay high prices for oil.” Last April, Jaishankar visited the White House for a virtual summit between Modi and President Biden. There, U.S. officials told their ...
The region (rural vs. urban) variable was derived from metropolitan statistical areas defined by the US Census core-based statistical areas (CBSAs). Individuals living in a CBSA with a population fewer than 50,000 residents were classified as living in a non-metropolitan setting. Individuals’ ...
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Sociodemographic and health-related covariates included age, race/ethnicity, immigration status, employment status, educational level, family income, census region, type of insurance, general health status, and the number of comorbidities. We also analyzed the primary outcome in subgroups: racial/ethnic...
The weighted distributions of respondents by age, sex, and race/ethnicity (eTable 1 in the Supplement) were consistent with 2016 estimates from the US Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey.24 Overall, 10.8% (95% CI, 10.4%-11.1%) of US adults were estimated to have 1 or more current...
Figure 9: Breast cancer mortality rates by race, 1970–2020 Accessibility description Line graph displaying breast cancer mortality per 100,000 women for Black and White women in the US from 1970-2020. Until 1980, White women reported slightly higher breast cancer mortality rates. Since 1980, Bla...